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A
no-limit or pot-limit betting structure for a
game gives it a different character from limit
poker, requiring a separate set of rules in many
situations. All the rules for limit games apply
to no-limit and pot-limit games, except as noted
in this section. No-limit means that the amount
of a wager is limited only by the table stakes
rule, so any part or all of a player’s chips may
be wagered. The rules of no-limit play also apply
to pot-limit play, except that a bet may not exceed
the pot size. For those rules that apply only
to no-limit and pot-limit lowball, see the section
Lowball.”
NO-LIMIT
RULES
1.
The number of raises in any betting round is unlimited.
2.
All bets must be at least equal to the minimum
bring-in, unless the player is going all-in.
3.
All raises must be equal to or greater than the
size of the previous bet or raise on that betting
round, except for an all-in wager. A player who
has already checked or called may not subsequently
raise an all-in bet that is less than the full
size of the last bet or raise. (The half-the-size
rule for reopening the betting is for limit poker
only.) Example: Player A bets $100 and Player
B raises $100 more, making the total bet $200.
If Player C goes all in for less than $300 total
(not a full $100 raise), and Player A calls, then
Player B has no option to raise again, because
he wasn’t fully raised. (Player A could have raised,
because Player B raised.)
4.
A wager is not binding until the chips are actually
released into the pot, unless the player has made
a verbal statement of action.
5.
If there is a discrepancy between a player's
verbal statement and the amount put into the pot,
the bet will be corrected to the verbal statement.
6.
If a call is short due to a counting error, the
amount must be corrected, even if the bettor has
shown down a superior hand.
7. Because the amount
of a wager at big-bet poker has such a wide range,
a player who has taken action based on a gross
misunderstanding of the amount wagered needs some
protection. A bettor should not show down a hand
until the amount put into the pot for a call seems
reasonably correct, or it is obvious that the
caller understands the amount wagered. The decision-maker
is allowed considerable discretion in ruling on
this type of situation. A possible rule-of-thumb
is to disallow any claim of not understanding
the amount wagered if the caller has put eighty
percent or more of that amount into the pot. Example:
On the end, a player puts a $500 chip into the
pot and says softly, “Four hundred.” The opponent
puts a $100 chip into the pot and says, “Call.”
The bettor immediately shows the hand. The dealer
says, “He bet four hundred.” The caller says,
“Oh, I thought he bet a hundred.” In this case,
the recommended ruling normally is that the bettor
had an obligation to not show the hand when the
amount put into the pot was obviously short, and
the “call” can be retracted. Note that the character
of each player can be a factor. (Unfortunately,
situations can arise at big-bet poker that are
not so clear-cut as this.)
8.
A player who says "raise" is allowed to continue
putting chips into the pot with more than one
move; the wager is assumed complete when the player’s
hands come to rest outside the pot area. (This
rule is used because no-limit play may require
a large number of chips be put into the pot.)
9.
A bet of a single chip or bill without comment
is considered to be the full amount of the chip
or bill allowed. However, a player acting on a
previous bet with a larger denomination chip or
bill is calling the previous bet unless this player
makes a verbal declaration to raise the pot. (This
includes acting on the forced bet of the big blind.)
10.
If a player tries to bet or raise less than the
legal minimum and has more chips, the wager must
be increased to the proper size. (This does not
apply to a player who has unintentionally put
too much in to call.) The wager is brought up
to the sufficient amount only, no greater size.
11.
All wagers may be required to be in the same denomination
of chip (or larger) used for the minimum bring-in,
even if smaller chips are used in the blind structure.
If this is done, the smaller chips do not play
except in quantity, even when going all-in.
12.
In non-tournament games, one optional live straddle
is allowed. The player who posts the straddle
has last action for the first round of betting
and is allowed to raise. To straddle, a player
must be on the immediate left of the big blind,
and must post an amount twice the size of the
big blind.
13.
In all no-limit and pot-limit games, the house
has the right to place a maximum time limit for
taking action on your hand. The clock may be put
on someone by the dealer as directed by a floorperson,
if a player requests it. If the clock is put on
you when you are facing a bet, you will have one
additional minute to act on your hand. You will
have a ten-second warning, after which your hand
is dead if you have not acted.
14.
The cardroom does not condone "insurance" or any
other “proposition” wagers. The management will
decline to make decisions in such matters, and
the pot will be awarded to the best hand. Players
are asked to refrain from instigating proposition
wagers in any form. The players are allowed to
agree to deal twice (or three times) when someone
is all-in. “Dealing twice” means the pot is divided
in two, with each portion being dealt for separately.
POT-LIMIT
RULES
1.
If a wager is made that exceeds the pot size,
the surplus will be given back to the bettor as
soon as possible, and the amount will be reduced
to the maximum allowable.
2.
The dealer or any player in the game can and should
call attention to a wager that appears to exceed
the pot size (this also applies to heads-up pots).
The oversize wager may be corrected at any point
until all players have acted on it.
3.
If an oversize wager has stood for a length of
time with someone considering what action to take,
that person has had to act on a wager that was
thought to be a certain size. If the player then
decides to call or raise, and attention is called
at this late point to whether this is an allowable
amount, the floorperson may rule that the oversize
amount must stand (especially if the person now
trying to reduce the amount is the person that
made the wager).
4. The maximum amount
a player can raise is the amount in the pot after
the call is made. Therefore, if a pot is $100,
and someone makes a $50 bet, the next player can
call $50 and raise the pot $200, for a total wager
of $250.
5.
In pot-limit play, it is advisable in many structures
to round off the pot size upward to produce a
faster pace of play. This is done by treating
any odd amount as the next larger size. For example,
if the pot size was being kept track of with $25
units, then a pot size of $80 would be treated
as a pot size of $100.
6.
In pot-limit hold’em and pot-limit Omaha, many
structures treat the little blind as if it were
the same size of the big blind in computing pot
size. In such a structure, a player can open for
a maximum of four times the size of the big blind.
For example, if the blinds are $5 and $10, a player
may open with a raise to $40. (The range of options
is to either open with a call of $10, or raise
in increments of five dollars to any amount from
$20 to $40.) Subsequent players also treat the
$5 as if it were $10 in computing the pot size,
until the big blind is through acting on the first
betting round.
7. In pot-limit,
if a chip or a bill larger than the pot size is
put into the pot without comment, it is considered
to be a bet of the pot size.
Rules
provided by Bob Ciaffone via ROBERT’S RULES OF
POKER
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